I detested the idea of Wayland and the way it was marketed for years. Then a few months ago, after some frustration with X that I don't remember, I tried Wayland (with sway, since I was an i3 person) for the first time and have been pleasantly surprised at how well it works. It's not perfect, but neither is X. It does enough things better than X that I've decided to stick with it.
To be specific, configuring things like scaling, auto rotation on my laptop/tablet thing (and rotating the touch screen and stylus to match), and automatically using external displays as they are plugged in (with kanshi) has been much easier than with Xorg. Maybe if I was still just sitting at a desktop it would be different, but for these scenarios Wayland is nice.
To be specific, configuring things like scaling, auto rotation on my laptop/tablet thing (and rotating the touch screen and stylus to match), and automatically using external displays as they are plugged in (with kanshi) has been much easier than with Xorg. Maybe if I was still just sitting at a desktop it would be different, but for these scenarios Wayland is nice.